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Psychology. Scientific investigation of behaviour and mental processes. Interdisciplinary approaches. . Cognitive scienceInvestigate mental processes as perception, memory and decision making as computing mechanisms and create comprehensive models on multiple scientific bases (mathematics, computer sciences, neurobiology, linguistics etc.) Evolutionary psychologyFocus of the origin of different psychological mechanisms using the terms of genetic30019
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1. Basic concepts of psychology
2. Psychology
Scientific investigation of behaviour and mental processes
5. Interdisciplinary approaches. Cognitive science
Investigate mental processes as perception, memory and decision making as computing mechanisms and create comprehensive models on multiple scientific bases (mathematics, computer sciences, neurobiology, linguistics etc.)
Evolutionary psychology
Focus of the origin of different psychological mechanisms using the terms of genetics, ethology and physiology
6. Basic disciplines: 1. Experimental psychology
Focus on the experimentation concerning the basic mental processes.
2. Developmental psychology
Focus on the human development
3. Personality psychology
Focus on the constructs of human personality
4. Social psychology
Focus on the nature and organisation of human interpersonal relationships
7. Applied disciplines:
School and education psychology
Work and organisation psychology
Military psychology
8. Clinical disciplines: Clinical psychology
Focus on the assessment and treatment of mental/behavioural disorders
9. Health Psychology
Focus on health behaviour and prevention with modification of those behaviours that carry epidemiological risk.
10. Medical psychology Focus on the psychological issues in general medical practice e.c. doctor patient relationship, communication, assessment and treatment of psychological complaints, symptoms and disorders frequently associated with general medical problems and
11. Behavioural medicine
Focus on comprehensive management of complex, chronic physical disorders (e.c. CHD, bronchial asthma, pain, diabetes, chronic GI diseases)
12. Theory of Mind I.
13. Intrapsychic conflicts
Determinims
Libido
Early childhood development
Unconscioous mental process
14. The unconscious mental process Much of the human mental activity occurs outside of awareness
These activity influences behaviour and conscious thoughts but not available to voluntary recall
The unconscious process represents drives, instincts and wishes, impulses, fantasies considered unacceptable
The unconscious process produces attitudes, thinking patterns and behaviours as part of the personality (conscience, defence mechanisms, automatic behaviours)
15. Psychic determinism
All mental activity is meaningful and is connected with previous life experiences. No mental activity is accidental or meaningless.
16. Drives Drives is the motivation behind mental processes and behaviour
The manifestation of unconscious drives are: wishes, fantasies, impulses
There are two major categories of drives: libido (sexual drive) and thanatos (aggressive drive)
Drives press toward gratification and discharge. In the infant and child the actions are more direct and overt (primary process) then gradually meet social standards (secondary process).
17. The importance of psychosexual development
oral stage (primary drive satisfaction is achieved by sucking)
anal stage (primary drive satisfaction is achieved by voluntary control of urinary and anal expulsion and retention)
18. Oedipal stage
Genitals became the primary source of interest and pleasure
Oedipus complex (child wishes to have an exclusive relationship with the opposite sex parent) and oedipal conflict (fear that the same sex parent will be displeased and angry with the child for his rivalrous wishes). The resolution is the identification with the same sex parent.
19. ??
Latency (primary interest on peers and socialisation)
Genital stage: Previous experiences are integrated to primary genial sexuality.
20. Defence mechanisms: Mental operations that function outside of awareness to ward off anxiety and maintain a sense of safety, self esteem, and well being
Along with maturation emerge in a developmental sequence
Some defences may emerge episodically some may become habitual as the part of the personality.
21. Structural model of mind: Id the unconscious, psychic representation of drives
Ego is a group of functions that provide for adaptation to the demand of the drives and to the requirements of external (sociocultural) reality.
Superego: represents the moral, ethical values, judgements, conscience and the ego-ideal
22. Psychoanalysis as treatment: Main objective: Cope with fixation or regression
Free association and dream analysis
Clarification: obtaining further associations about issues and relationships
Confrontation: Pointing out the defences and other unconscious actions by identifying connections, continuities and inconsistencies
Interpretation: Conceptualisation the nature of the patient s unconscious wishes and thought through clarification and confrontation
23. Transference: Attitudes, feelings, thoughts and wishes that involve important figures in the past are unconsciously re-enacted with individuals (therapist, medical staff, physician) in the present.
Counter-transference: The same process but occurs on the part of the therapist toward the patient.
24. Behavioural and Social Learning PsychologyTheory of Mind II.
25. All behaviours and personality development represent the acquisition and organisation of reactions, responses and (perceptual, cognitive and behavioural) patterns. These originate in and are governed by learning that are subject primarily to environmental influence
26. Behaviourism Subject of study the objectively measurable behaviour
external behaviour - directly observable
internal behaviour - emotions and cognition (could be monitoring with instrumentation)
empirism and experimentation
emphasis on learning
27. Classic or respondent conditioning (Pavlov)
stimulus: cue from an internal or external event
response: a behaviour provoked by a stimulus
unconditioned stimulus (UCS) e.g. food ? unconditioned response (UCR)
conditioned stimulus (CS) e.g. bell ringing ? conditioned response (CR)
28. acquisition phase: the period when the conditioned response is learned
discrimination: some stimuli which similar to CS can elicit the CR but others not
generalisation: (almost) all stimuli which similar to CS can elicit the CR
extinction: CS loses the power to elicit CR (by no longer paired with the CS) or response no longer follows the behaviour
aversive conditioning: an aversive stimulus (e.g. feeling nausea) pairs an unwanted behaviour (e.g. drinking alcoholic beverages)
29. Operant conditioning (Skinner) behaviour is determined by its consequences
actions ? reward - one action (or some actions) are reinforced others are extinct
30. + reinforcement: increasing the probability of an action by a + stimulus (e.g. giving rewards)
- reinforcement: increasing the probability of an action by removing an aversive event
+ punishment: decreasing the probability of an action by a negative stimulus
- punishment: decreasing the probability of an action by removing a + stimulus
31. Problems with punishment: reinforcements are much more effective
punishment models aggressive behaviour
negative emotional responses are conditioned incidentally
32. Social learning (Bandura) Modelling:
facilitate appropriate behaviour
can facilitate/inhibit behavioural preferences from own repertoire
can influence emotional responses and anticipatory arousal
33. Self regulation
self observation and monitoring
self evaluation and judgement
self reaction
34. Self efficacy
success experiences,
vicarious experiences
verbal persuasion
physiological state
35. Cognitive and behavioural therapies well elaborated treatment protocols
collaborative relationships
aims/goals/models/explanations are explicit for the patient
time limited
mainly self help
36. Comparison of behavioural and psychoanalytic model:
37. Behaviour is determined by current contingencies, reinforcement history and genetic endowment Intrapsychic processes determine behaviour
38. Problem behaviour is the focus of study and treatment Behaviour is interpreted as a symbol of intrapsychic processes and symptoms of unconscious conflicts. The underlying conflict is the focus of treatment
39. Contemporary variables, such as contingencies of reinforcement, are the focus of analysis Historical variables, such as childhood experiences, are the focus of analysis
40. Treatment entails application of learning principles and cognitive conceptualisation of beliefs, attitudes and behaviour Treatment consists of bringing unconscious conflicts into consciousness
41. Objective observation measurement and experimentation are the methods employed Subjective methods of interpretation of behaviour and inference regarding unobservable events (e.g. intrapsychic processes) are employed
42. Theory is based on experimentation Theory is predominantly based on case histories
43. Tenets can be formulated into testable hypotheses and evaluated through experimentation Many tenets cannot be formulated into testable hypotheses
44. Psychological assessment
45. Psychological interview I.General description Appearance
Overt behaviour and psychomotor activity
Manierism
Stereotyped behaviour
Agitation
Psychomotor retardation
Attitude
Hostile
Passive
Complainant
Co-operative
46. Mood and affectivity Mood
Depressed
Euphoric
Alternating
Affect
Anger
Anxiety
Euphory
Appropriateness of affects
47. Speech characteristics Talkative
Unspontaneous
Voluble
Responsive/unresponsive
Bizarre
48. Perception No perceptual disturbances
Illusions
Hallucinations
Visual/auditory/olfactory/tactile
Scenic/coomentatory/imperative
49. Thought process Loosening of associations
Flight of ideas, racing thoughts
Incoherence
Neologisms
Thought blocking
Tenacity
50. Content of thought Delusions
Paranoia
Preoccupaitons
Obsessions and compulsions
Phobias
Suicidal ideas
Poverty of content
51. Sensorium and cognition I.
Consciousness
Orientation (time, place, person, situation)
52. Sensorium and cognition II.Memory Remote
Recent past (months)
Recent (few days)
Immediate recall
53. Sensorium and cognition III. Concentration and attention
Reading/writing
Abstract thoughts (proverbs)
Information and intelligence
54.
Impulsivity
Judgement and insight
Reliability